290 



Page 

 Illustrations MADE by the Bureau x. 



XXII-XXIII 



IMBERT, Ramon— 



acknowledgments to is, 143, 199 



on Haitian skulls 30 



on Santo Domingo idol 199 



iM Thurn, E. F.— 



on Anlillean stone implements 9*2, 97 



on Carib mortuary customs 71 



on customs of people of Guiana 147 



on dance sticks of Guiana Indians 195 



on preparation of cassava 52-53 



on races of the West ludians 97 



on seats used by Indians of Guiana '204 



Indian delegations, study of x.xxi 



INDIERA, location and inhabitants of 25 



Inigo, Fray— 



as a historian 20, 40 



on aboriginal Antilleans 28 



on Borinqueiios 23, 68-69, 93 



on burial customs of 18th century 72 



iroquoian cosmology xviii 



Irrigation 50-51 



Irving, Washington— 



citing Ramon Pane on Haitians 139 



on Carib cannibalism 60 



Jacobson, Mr, acknowledgments to 18,97 



Jamaica — 



archeological reconnoissances xxvi 



mortuary customs 71 



pictography 148 



skeletal remains 29-30 



slavery 25 



John. Andrew, work of xxi 



Juarebo. (See Yuhubo.) 



Juegos DE sola 42,79,81-85, UO 



JuNCos, Fernandez, on Porto Rican folk- 

 lore 20 



Kiowa, researches among xiii-xiv 



Knobbed heads 174-175 



KrCg, L., on Porto Rican pictography 149 



Laet, Juan de 68 



Landa. Padre Fray Dieg" de. on Yuca- 

 tan temples 242 



Las Casas — 



as a historian 19-20 



Columbus cited by 77,203 



on Antillean name for creator 55 



on betrothals of caciques 48 



on Borinqueiios 27 



on cacique Aguebana 38 



on dress of Haitians 34 



on Haitian idols 57 



on mask presented to Columbus 137 



Latimer collection, feature of, noted by 



Mason 91 



Leary. Miss Ella, work of xxv 



Lei DA, 1)R LiBORio, on duhos 202 



Lesser Antilles— 



aboriginal art 142 



archeological researches, xv, xxvi-xxviii, 17 



cannibalism 50 



geological changes 219-220 



location and extent 21 



native houses 4(i-47 



natives as potters 189 



occupied by Carib 27,217 



Lesser Antilles— Continued. 



pictography 148 



slavery 25 



(.Sec a/so Antilleans, Carib. and namesof 

 islands.) 



Library of the Bureau x.xxiv 



Llenas, Senor— 



acknowledgments to 18 



on Antillean workshop 91-92 



on skulls from Santo Domingo 83 



LoiSA, a Porto Rican chieftainess 39 



LORENZANA, ou Ccmpoalan ruins 233 



Louisiana Purchase Exposition, exhibits 



for x,xi-xiii, XIV, XVI, XXII 



Lucayan islands. {See Bahama islands.) 



Lyon, Mr, acknowledgments to 274 



Mabodamaca, a Porto Rican cacique 40 



Mabouya— 



derivation of term 130 



(.Seea^'o Priesthood, Antillean, and Zemis. i 

 Maboyas. (See Mabouya.) 



Macana, an Antillean club 93,209 



McCormick, L. M., photographs of picto- 



graphs supplied by 157-158 



McGee, Dr W J— 



acknowledgments to 18 



resignation ix 



McGuire, J. D.. work of xx-xxi 



McNeil, Me, sketch of pictographs by 151 



Madrid American Historical Exposi- 

 tion 18. 100, 102, 234 



Maler, Doctor, idols found by 250 



Mallery, on Indian picture writing 148,149 



Mammiform stones. (.See Three-pointed, 

 stones.) 



Manatibex, a Haitian cacique 56 



Maniatex, a Haitian cacique 211 



Manioc as food 106 



Manuscripts in Bureau, cataloguing 



of. 



, XVIII-XIS 



Maquarri, an Arawak dance 72 



Margal. {See Pi y Margal. ) 



Maria de la Luz Gomez 267 



Martinique, island of 207 



Martyr. Peter. [See Peter Martyr. ) 



Masks— 



shell 193 



stone 83 



wooden 136, 210 



Mason, Prof. O. T.— 



archeological objects figured by 143, 



144,191,209 



citing Ramon Pane on Haitians 139 



on amulets 138, 139 



on beads 109 



on boot-shaped stone specimen 96 



on celts 92, 96, 97, 98 



on curved stones 93 



on disks with human faces 136 



on duhos 204, 205, 206, 207 



on elbow stones 173-174 



on Guesde collection 92 



on human sacrifice by Borinquenos 168 



on Latimer collection 90, 92 



on leg-bands of ancient Antilleans 199 



on mealing implements 105-10l> 



on mortars 106 



